On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 01:27:00PM +0200, Stefano Garzarella wrote: > RFC: > - I'd like to move MODULE_ALIAS_NETPROTO(PF_VSOCK) to af_vsock.c. > @Jorgen could this break the VMware products? What will cause the vmw_vsock_vmci_transport.ko module to be loaded after you remove MODULE_ALIAS_NETPROTO(PF_VSOCK)? Perhaps drivers/misc/vmw_vmci/vmci_guest.c:vmci_guest_probe_device() could do something when the guest driver loads. There would need to be something equivalent for the host side too. This will solve another issue too. Today the VMCI transport can be loaded if an application creates an AF_VSOCK socket during early boot before the virtio transport has been probed. This happens because the VMCI transport uses MODULE_ALIAS_NETPROTO(PF_VSOCK) *and* it does not probe whether this system is actually a VMware guest. If we instead load the core af_vsock.ko module and transports are only loaded based on hardware feature probing (e.g. the presence of VMware guest mode, a virtio PCI adapter, etc) then transports will be well-behaved. > - DGRAM sockets are handled as before, I don't know if make sense work > on it now, or when another transport will support DGRAM. The big > issues here is that we cannot link 1-1 a socket to transport as > for stream sockets since DGRAM is not connection-oriented. Let's ignore DGRAM for now since only VMCI supports it and we therefore do not require multi-transport support. > diff --git a/include/net/af_vsock.h b/include/net/af_vsock.h > index 86f8f463e01a..2a081d19e20d 100644 > --- a/include/net/af_vsock.h > +++ b/include/net/af_vsock.h > @@ -94,7 +94,13 @@ struct vsock_transport_send_notify_data { > u64 data2; /* Transport-defined. */ > }; > > +#define VSOCK_TRANSPORT_F_H2G 0x00000001 > +#define VSOCK_TRANSPORT_F_G2H 0x00000002 > +#define VSOCK_TRANSPORT_F_DGRAM 0x00000004 Documentation comments, please. > +void vsock_core_unregister(const struct vsock_transport *t) > +{ > + mutex_lock(&vsock_register_mutex); > + > + /* RFC-TODO: maybe we should check if there are open sockets > + * assigned to that transport and avoid the unregistration > + */ If unregister() is only called from module_exit() functions then holding a reference to the transport module would be enough to prevent this case. The transport could only be removed once all sockets have been destroyed (and dropped their transport module reference).
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